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PRESSE |
GALERIEN: ALLE BILDER AUF EINEN BLICK ÜBER KLINT: CURRICULUM | PRESSE |PHOTOS | ||||
Dreaming Neon Black, England (http://dreaming-neon-black.blogspot.com), 27.10.2006
The Triumph of Stuckism, School of Art & Design, Hope Street
Though the Stuckists’ show at the last Biennial prepared me slightly, it is
still surprising to see so many modern paintings of actual things in one
exhibition space. But then that’s the whole point of the Stuckists, to stick
Tracey Emin’s postmodernism where the sun don’t shine and get back to producing
artwork that everyone can enjoy (apart from some critics who made their names
talking about $4 million sharks in formaldehyde and unmade beds).
This is
a much smaller collection than the one so claustrophobically displayed at the
Walker two years ago, but it is all of the same exciting standard. There are
vivid colours everywhere, and more vivid insights into the minds of each artist,
multiplied or divided by the viewer’s own imagination.
Bill Lewis ‘Self
Portrait’ shows him under the moonlight, wearing a purple satin shirt and
holding a pair of antlers, whilst a timepiece-wearing fox looks on. What must a
night out with him be like, eh? Jaime Braz brings a touch of surrealism to the
proceedings, with his Adieu, Sardine Attack and Stray Cars Mating Season
offerings. And in Guy Denning's The Madness of King George, a man and a woman
scream their millennial fury, surrounded by scribbled curses against Bush the
Second and his partners in crime.
But Naive John is first
among equals, and not because he is the Liverpool-based curator. The Other a centaur
waiting for a bus, in a bizarre but breathtakingly beautiful creation, while An
Unmedicated Disaster on Upper Parliament Street presents exactly what it says -
and the results certainly aren't disastrous.
The Stuckists are anything
but stuck. If art has a future, if the proverbial person in the street is ever
going to get excited by art, then that art will be made by that proverbial
person in the street. Or at the bus stop. People like the triumphant
Stuckists.
(C) Adam Ford, Liverpool